The Daily Worker Newspaper, February 19, 1929, Page 3

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Ree ate org” ~ “ DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, Page Three ARTY PRE-CONVENTION DISCUSSION SECTION | For Party Unity and the CE.C—Against the Opposition’s Factionalism I demand that you leading com- UARY 19,3929) oo was very close to the CEC and the|clared himself for the Minority. We | and we entered into a conversation, | made by comrades, they were only | r | CHARLES REYNOLDS. | while I was a member of the I. W.)sition and that District 12, Execu- | Foreword. |W. and for the reason I have been | tive, were bankrupt and the DO was | CI, if I remember correctly, the rea-| discussed ways and means to ob-|he informed me that he was going | Poll parroting -Khanaeff. rades, repudiate your Minority po- | ‘ ‘ / affected with Opposition tendencies. | receiving $30.00 a week, the, sub-dis,|son of his confidence in me was,|tain contact and other matters per-|to stand for the Minority. I asked - | sition, subordinate yourselves to the he CEC has received the fol- | When a resolution was presented, | org, $60 per month, YWL org. $30.00| that previously he aired out my/|taining to District 12 and then| him why didn’t he vote for the| I felt that if I had not taken the | Majority position without reserva- ng article from Comrade | which protested against statements|per week, the YWL sub-dist. org.| Opposition tendencies. dump Fislerman overboard by eall- | Minority amendment that I intro-| initiative in the Opposition that it tions. ‘ rles Reynolds of Seattle. | of Foster that the Right danger is | $60.00 per month and two others | ing a caucus the next night without | duced, he answered that he voted | would not have materialized in Seat: | PP ikevece rades of the CEC ; rade Charles Reynolds repre- |the main danger and the CEC a|who worked in the office were re-| After Khanaeff went back to|him. By this time I was becoming| against Trotskyism once and that| tle, I furthermore assume most of | leave you comrades of the CRU ed the Opposition viewpoint the responsibility of giving objec- | and DEC to judge me as you see fit. he Seattle membership meet- + Comrades are asked to note ) Comrade Charles Reynolds of | Then I met Khanaeff who came 1 tle is not William Reynolds | from District 13, he showed me two : detroit, and has nothing to do | underground documents signed For- t the latter. | jack, which Khanaeff claimed was rie Vas ‘the statement of the Minority as to fake unity and suppressive measures | that the Majority was supposed to |be guilty of. California I received an invitation|rather uneasy about where we of|was sufficient and that he was go-| H through Minnie Grenville, to attend | the Opposition would end up at. ling to fight it out at the conven-| tive support to Trotskyism as @| y have learned my lesson by re- a caucus at Comrade Burkes’ h use. fs i ltion. At one other time Forrest | Minority oppositionist, I furthermore | ooiving a hell of a political thump- We only discuz:2d about the inves-| The third caucus we held was | showed me a conimunication which |Tepudiate any statements which T| ing, Khanaeff also told me that we tiation of Comrade Burkes’ house | Composed of Fislerman, myself, | was supposed to have come from the | was responsbile for making through | 041g have to fight tho execudiven by the Party Committee. I attended| Price, Forrest, Burke and Minnie) Minority CEC which said to stand | underground channels, which might} oven after the convention. \two other caucus meetings at Com-| Grenville. Tt was decided that Burke |¢, one delegate or representative | be used against our executive. T ac- rade Forrest’s house. and myself would attend the Party |from each unit as it was instructed | cept the decisions of the CI and the} i < _ | discussion meeting the next day,/from the CI, signed Forjack. | Majority of the CEC without reser- | | At one meeting Comrade Price|while Price, Forrest, Fislerman x | vations. |and myself and Forrest, his wife| would draw up a contact with other} There I as a Minority do claim |He, Khanaeff told mo that there |attended. We discussed the ques-|units, and prepare a resolution.|that we the Opposition in District |_| was some opposition to me coming | <ion of getting contact with outside | artery that I did not attend any|12, have been used as fools and Bittelman reli | units. sec eeti s) | 4 , e oe objective to the caucus as I was not reliable. | units. At second meetings (caucus) | other caucus’ as I was geting dis-| books by the Trotskyite Opposition fubeetoce if T have done the Party | Right wing CEC, as an individual I took the Opposition. | ceiving pay. Th-‘ the CI represen- tative stated that the Party was dominated by a bunch of Jews. I personally objected to his last two} assertions. Therefore he did not at- tempt to talk further on those ques- tions. I was invited by Khanaeff on three different occasions to at- tend a caucus, I could not attend as I was busy on committee work. Comradely yours, is is an acknowledgment of my CHAS Reyer of breaking Party discipline, iulso why I repudiate the Minor- \pposition. Khanaeff informed me that he| 1 more detailed Political state-|had the Caucasian comrades 50 per P, I held a temporary caucus with Forrest and Price in the pres- ence of another. I ineformed them I would go with the Majority, their | 1 furthermore claim that Foster, and Aronberg are giving support to Trotskyism, will be forthcoming soon. cent for the Opposition. That all ink Li i i Comrade Forrest, myself and Min- eg 2 5 opto 4” ing a logger and my previous |outside units except Seattle in Dis- Eee oy Ogee ig oo eee eet Fomest in.(gusted. On one other occasion, I|in the Khanacff a Trotskyite, if| injury, I hold you responsible for) answer was that they would con- ! ing in the class struggle was| trict 12, was uncertain to be Oppo-| Khanaeff informed me that he|formed me that Fislerman had de-|met Fislerman, on the skid road,|there was anti-semetic statements | my actions. | tinue with the Opposition.—C. R. , 1 A By B. MICHTON. . a a = fs 1 organization, and the aoe { x, < * s of superiority may determine anc & NeS3 Dist. 3, Philadelphia) bt limit their status of usefulness for f oking over the “Draft Thesis : the work of our cause. r bakthah cay rience | ‘There is another danger. Many tine Section 4 on the Building | rights as leading bodies in their| outside of the city in which the Dis-|tion of the district political leaders) DEC Should Be Driving Body. | 4. DEC to meet right after CEC; At present we have a situation | comrades entrusted with leading po- ing Party Organs. I heartil terrritory, because it is the political | trict Office is located. on the correct line and work of the} I am convinced that many po- Plenum meetings. where leading bodies in the district | sitions in the various committees do re Ae ovina proposed for | leader of the given territory, but we) The schedule for meetings of the| Party. ‘The district bureau ‘will havelliiesl and organizational exrors| 5» DEC Plenum to have CHC rep-|mect once|in many months, and we|not always have the leading quali 3 pail din ie ‘of thie Sane and| 4° not see the direct link of the|jeading organs leaves the old fea-| better chance for correct orienta-|have been made within our leading | Tesentative. must not make this a regular prac- | ties as superiors and this may bring , ng math Mika edahaata of the | Section committee and the other |tures of frequency of the meeting de- | tion by meeting at least once a|bodies in the districts, due to the]. 6. District bureau to meet once tice. The Communist activity of the} a good deal of misunderstanding ; leading organs of the district. Up| pendent largely on the local condi-| month. That will put the district| fact that the DEC has been re-|in two weeks, rank and file is much dependent upon | and difficulties in the Bolshevization n territory.” Indeed, that is rtant! The section committees > be made the connecting link, 7, Secretariat to meet once a| the political leadership and guidance | of our Party, because they will not of the DEC. know how to exercise it and the No Bureaucracy rank and file are not yet Bolshe- |bureau automatically above the DEC politically, carrying the line |down to the secretariat. to now the section organizer would be a member of the Organization Department and all other matters duced to little importance, whereas |the DEC should have been the driv- week, | ing power of political leadership and tions. This is one particular fea- ture we have to do away with, be- “Too Many Meetings.” | ne of the connecting links, be-|—' i ae cause there are always local condi- : | is : ‘ at sah | Riged ee eee ene eee fno| Were subject to communication. No|tions for leading bodies within a| ‘This secretariat, which in reality the organic medium for organiza) | Within my oi district I person-| Let us be frank. I base my ar- ee ict and the nucleus, leading body will ever be a political) district, Another one: the more im-| must be the agents of the DEC and tional activity. ally happened to meet with resist-| sument on the provisidn of the Turnover. : Theat Taeomulete: leader if it is not part and parcel | portant the leading body (I—DEG; | the district bureau will have to t| ‘Therefore, to improve and put on| nee to “too many meetings.” This! Pratt ‘Thesis which says “no less| On the problem of “Why does : of the political leadership. There-|> District Bureau; 3—Secretariat),| me the political leadersip in be-|@ Working basis the DEC and the| “resistance to too many meetings” |than three times during the year” ,0t the Party hold the member- a 1e Draft Thesis, Section 4, is,|fore, the section organizer or the y opinion, very incomplete, and | secretary of the Section Executive some old features, the kind we | Committee must be a member of the » had in practice and which did |p, g, C, That will establish direct prove to be of service to our ; y. Let us consider some details: | 274 more correct Party leadership |within the various sections of the —We want to establish that the ion committees should have all| district, particularly in the sections EMERGEN ‘Continued from Page Onc) rhill, Mass—D. Fedo- k, $5; P. Panteley, $5; Banny, $5; A. Sychew- | was upheld by the leading bodies and | 9, “at Jeast once a month” because Ship?” (only about one-third of the | district organizer. At thé time of jeaging functionaries and organizers | @pPlicants remain in our Party). I |the election campaign, I proposed,| aye made a practice of such pro-| think this problem should not be rank and file (including also somejings (every four months). Again) 9 got; pean : as section organizer, that units meet| visions and will furnish the root| hard to solve. We will have to es- 2. Section organizers shall report | quring the two months of the cam-| fo. the future unless we radically| tablish “revolutionary training functionaries). By reducing the | we find the third body of the district | after DEC meetin; * i: n igs at section mem-| naign every week instead of ever; sc i BY r py number of meetings of the DEC, we| almost at the top of the political | bership meetings. bea cai ac ane aa appty a eo ee aun carc Be: they reduce the possibilties of orienta-| guidance of the district. 3. DEC to meet once a month. | committees. This was not carried! On Section 11, Democratic Cen- “Under our present alae out. The result was poor organiza- |tarlism and Party Discipline. who is rantenily aS irae |tional contact with the membership,| Article 4 must not have bureau ported our movement, signing an See less opportunity to discuss our elec-|cracy injected into it. “Superior- plication card, becomes a full-fled; : ‘ re A haar f aa » s -fledged tion program, insufficient orienta-|ity” is not a Bolshevik spirit. A| member of our Party the less they meet, especially in this || s * SEY given period when we have to raise | {Ween meetings of the district bur- the political and Party level of our|¢au (every month) and DEC meet.) oihers of the DEC. | sections, I submit the following: | 1. Section organizers shall’ be change it into a live movement. CY FUND | Collected by S. Wikstione, 1B, No. 8, Section 7, Brooklyn, from members of Scandin- avian Workers Club, Spar- ‘Kansas City Railroad Shop ‘Nucleus Calls tor CEC Support The British Imperialism Starting 5,000 Miles Plane Route to India LONDON, (By Mail).—As part of British imperialist plans to hold| tion on the political significance of | Bolshevik must know the correctness | these elements have never een gee. |conducting the election campaign. |of the activities of his own commit-| pared for a Bolshevik Party. The | "This is one of the many instances |tees and the commitees the other biggest part of that raw material of the too many meetings policy. comrades are engaged in. But, by |falls down thru lack of understand- The too many meetings feature | "0 means should we establish su-|ing of the duties and demands of railroad shop nucleus ofjIn addition to this, there is the} y, $2; G. Kalaus, $2; I. tacus: A. Nelson, $1; J. India against a revolt or attack dur-| Kansas City, after a thorough dis-| weakness organizationally of the|has become a bad thing in our Party. | Perior committees with superior of-|the Party. They drop out. The big- nenko, $2 .... 21.00| Shuten, $1; V. Mederson, $1; ing the coming world war, the Im- | cussion of the tasks and problems|Party. Hence many comrades capi-|Comrades really do have too many jficers as the heads of the commit-/ gest part of those remaining have ected by F. Fierstein, Los G, Ahnquist, $1; H. Carson, perial Airways has announced to-| confronting the Party, adopted at/tulate before these difficulties and] meetings—in the clubs, benevolent | tees, to be so understood and even- to go thru a self-education school. ngelés, OBL, San ccav sas 17.75| $1; J. Attisan, $1; Mrs. day a 5,000 mile regularly weekly | its meeting of January 10th, the fol-| give up all hope and attempt for a associations, singing societies, edu- tually so regarded. ‘Tn many cases the self-education is yenters Union, 1976, $10; Beene a B. rors $1; aot ae We pera Coorden ony lowing resolution: successful struggle. cational organizations, but not for) If a committee is classified as not complete and thoro, That leaves 3 . i . 9.0.5. rook! ete . I 10n, mgiand, an arachi, india. xan re | i i ivi! i 7 eo an ut % a see a een Géilactea "by Bastion 6, Nu Bienen pas England Saturday, eal In the present existing world con-| The Party, therefore, in order eg ae al RIO oe Betray euper tes then the head of she Som us undeveloped elements among a Soteanee os Carpe Leena tehitnbo;a TL: theie passengers arrive in India|ditions, the Communist Party in| maintain its position as a section eh eae Gr et apsnenitiens ef eearpide wack: Themed eaeee. Lhe Aaelees and willing comrades. Re aera hethee es te Seiapeiaw Acasa, eels colin Friday morning. lAmeriéa has a‘ great duty to per-|the Communist International and as-| minds Sat Ae men oct Or oe want |work of the comrades ‘will phat thc), Great improvement must be made Taee Bick tages t* ‘Nultner, $1;"B: Deriattsin; |form: The need of organizing the|sure revolutionary guidance and) °1t¥ ly Ps Ys org ork of the comrades will be guided) in this: matter. We must establish | | zationally, ete, graduates for the \field work of the Party. Naturally, | By Plane and Train. ‘ishnefsky, $1; Ginsburg, The beginning will be by triple- pay eee espe by the fear of the supetior officer] probationary period and training leadership to the workers of Amer- Shier th beh zs 5 rather than by his own conscious-) school for candidates in every dis- ica, must rid itself of tendencies | workers against the ruthless exploi- 50c; R. Sacharow, 50c; N. | ae | | tation of the broad masses of the ‘a. The Shue Penoff, $1 10.50 agit ee ctaat a | become the leader in organizing the and Trotskyism (hidden). It is) 3 ‘ , club, cir-| For instance, in my District, No.|riod of six months. During that rutz, 2; Duskus, $1; Shu- enoff, $1 ........+++++++ 10.50| From this point the service will be . 4 eaten’ v cle meetings, etc., and lead the poli-| 3, the calls for activity for the last | peri i mek, $5; Krauss, $53 Bronx Radical Youth, Bronx.. 10.00| by express to Genoa, Italy, from workers against the economic ex-/ therefore urgent that all the Com- 3. anq activities upside down. No) peri aby CO une est | period, they, AMOIG, Bat ae Coe eck, $2; Caminker, $2; \ Workmen's’ Cixcle, Br. 129, where. Short-Jupiter ‘flying boats |Ploitation which appears in the form) munist elements should unite behind| tivity within the organization {2 |Beriod are supplemented by the D.)nist education politically and in avidson, $2; Daniloff, $1; Chicago, Ill, .......«+-+.+ 10.00] will operate to Egypt. ,The last|°f rationalization of industry, wage | the Central Executive Committee of Be Oke ee without our (Commuaiat | . with threats of discipline. No dis-| Bolshevik organization. For this pe- and, $1; Beynstein el Russian 4A’s, Chicago, Ill 10.00] stage of the journey, from Cairo to| “uts, speed-up, etc. The organiza-/our Party and struggle unitedly) oi ntation peipline: a5: (St: svery day, Measure |rod) they, stould le. elven Won aa orowitz, $2; Lipshitz, $1; Louis Weitzenkom, N.Y. G... 10.00|India, will be by. triple-screw De|tion of and the struggle for the|against elements that tend to under- aS all fee tea ane Be rnireduced Myc pueearty (the fed or Aen een: ae ee ivi $1; Lubartowsky, Si: Aineninan © Tathuanian: Work Haviland-Jupiter air liners, W ich | Negro masses must become the most | mine the class struggle. The exis-| Our Party will never benefit from | and no superiority should be given and the Left movement under the AVI eee sd ease 2 limportant task of the Party. tence of an Opposition to the CEC these too many meetings unless the|to any one to enable them to exer-j supervision and guidance of Party ers Literary Society, Br. 161, Seattle, Wash. ....... Amalgamated Food Workers, Local 1, New York City.... | Collected by L. Johnsno, Buf- ein, $1; Leviton, $1; falo, N. Y.: Slovak Work- insberg, 50c; Berkowitz, | ers Society 81, $5; B. S. 0c; John Sonmer, $1; M. | Hoffman, $1; F. Marsekke, 1 less, $1; W. Schneppe, $1; $1; A. Anend, 50c; C. Ap- | . Fischer, 50¢; A. Weichsl, | pelblom, $1; A. Peterson, alperin, $1; Y. W. C. L., 3; Freiheit Yugent Club, 10; Diamond, $2; Fier- ein, $5; Ashman, $1; Os- ‘ow, $1; Lipshitz, $1; Ber- have been operated on the alate i d 10.00 | Basra route for the past two years. edad within the Party makes very diffi-, begin to realize that | cise superiority. Instead, our com-) instructors. The candidates must be cult and has already hindered the | Party meetings are the first condi- rades should be educated to the du-| taught and trained in this period in Right and | tion for Communist orientation and/|ties of their own Party. The Bol-| the duties and obligations of a Com- | Bolshevik activity. \shevization of our comrades should) munist to his Party. A period of Way x Very dangerous for the Party |activize the elements of our Party.| Party education for candidates wil While the CEC and the whole| would be the application of resist-|Many, and very many, of our com- undoubtedly bring good results tc While the Party nationally has, | passed the stage of being a propa-| Pisce : | ganda society and.has entered into| Steele against _ lactive leadership of the American| ‘T°tsky dangers. 10.00'Tife of Bartolomeo, Anti-Fascist Still in |workers, yet in District 10 the h | Party is still in its embryonic stages. Party committed a number of Right| ance to too many meetings to our|rades have a weak conception of|the end of making our Party < Party. Danger in Belgium ' yy. coming district and national) errors, it is absolutely criminal for) jeading bodies. — conventions must result in laying| the Opposition to utilize these er- the basis for the development of|rors as a platform for struggle| |Bolshevik ideology and Bolshevik | mas: (Red Aid Press Service) w 5e; M. Karsch, $1; J. Ca- |__ $1; Carl Johnson, $1 .. 10.50) PARIS, (By Mail)—The fate of the Party as a leader of the class| against the CEC. First, because the| ral, 50¢ (amounts pre- Workmen's Center, Newark .. 10.00) Angelo Bartolomeo, who shot the’ struggle in District 10. | CEG, in spite of its errors, has shown | = iously collected) " | Ukrainian Singing Society, \fascist priest Cavaradossi, upon Pers a ‘ that it is capable of leading the| lected by Sec, 3, City—J. | eMlizabeth, Noah sy 00 v2 vee ne 9.00! French territory and whose extradi-| The objective conditions in this' 5.4 in active revolutionary strug- immerman, Bertha, | Collected by F. Farslund, New tion is now demanded by the French | district are favorable for such a| 91..." sn secondly, the Opposition is Se; A. Arons, 50c; S. Dia- | York City: Peterson, $1; M. government, is still in the balance.| development. The industrialization| cyuotiy, and, in many instances to aondtone, $1; Sympathizer, Shodin, $1; Hillgron, $1; E. * Numerous protest meetings of |S0ing on in the territory of the dis-| preater degree, responsible for the 0c; Grolla, $1; Joe Collin, Gross, $1; O. Sjolin, 50c; E. workers and others in Belgium|trict, the crisis in the coal and iron! | ission of Right errors. We 0c: Markoff, $10; R. Olson, $1; Anna Nelson, $1; against the extradition for a poli-|mines, the growing exploitation in| (4) upon all Party members, and| ‘recht, $1; Lupshansky,$1 17.00| S. Shelfesfrand, $1; R. Carl- tical offence, seem to have made|the packing, railroad, and other in-| Jarticularly those who support the vak Workers Society, Br. son, $1; B. Carlson, $1 .... 9.50)some impression, for the court | dustries, etc., are all conditions that pitt iman Opposition, to cease all 4, Chicago, Ill. ........-. 16.09 | Section 5, Workers (Commu- which met in Liege on Jan. 2 heard|must be utilized for the building of | Sictionaliain vanal unite” behind’ the it 3, Sec. 7, collected at nist) Party, Chicago, Ill... 8.50|the case, but did not come to any|the Party and the development of) (5G At the same time we demand : tedacht’s Lecture, B’klyn. 15.02 | Branch 5, See. 5, Bronx .... 8.00|conclusion. The verdict has been| the class struggle. that in the interests of the struggle M. Lucas, Worcester, Mass. 14.16 | Collected by Joseph Ginsburg, postponed. Protests have still value) The Right and Trotsky dangers | against the Right and Trotsky L. D. L. D., Branch 92, Worcester, Mass.: Michael and should be made direct to the are serious menaces to the Party as 4 og Veneta” a ache ans | ticero, Ill.—M. Butvill, $1; Mitchell, $3; John Same- Belgian government. bi hake aed weak marl at te peel omen tee ne Come | {. Giliz, $1; G. Lemont, | cillian, $2; John Corbin, $1; ltrict 10. The objective conditions | ECCI that the principle of proletari- 1; T. Miller, $1; J. Pudzu- | Tda Pilson, $1 ..... peesaaes 100 + are such as to give rise to pessimism|anizing the Party and the drawing | ias, $1; A. Angaitis, $1; R. | Collected by G. Dreuth, San Mass Meetings of | within the ranks of the Party. While| in of the proletarians from the basic v jalinanskas, $1; K. Skais- Francisco, Cal.: G. Haeck, Workers Protest | industrialization draws in new forces ;tustries into the Party leadership _& & Af & 4 4 is, $1; Wm. Stankus, $15 $1; G. Dreuth, $1; J. Adams, G T Bill **° the cycle of capitalist exploita- : é \.'Staskas, $1; K, Yurgan, $l; A. A. Stillman, $1; M. reek Terror Bill ijn, at the same time it develops|be carried out not only nationally 1; C. Ziz, $1; J. Paulins, Stafanoff, $1; D. Bloom, $1 6.00} Hesgeurgarns im lreformist illusions and pessimism.) but locally as well. ; A. Kaminskane, $1.... 14.00) Collected by M. J. Pyryovich, (Red Aid Press Service) | ov _ » 4, St. Nucleus 12, Ch z Chicago, Il.: M. Jambre- Phe ate ee ee Seal i = od ago, Ill. . 13.00} sich, 2; P. Lange, $1; M. J. e new bill prepared by Venizelos | neockeNueletis I, Brzovich, $1; J. Batinich, against the revolutionaty working JUST OFF THE PRESS! |} ‘“ sock, Mich. .. oven 1800] $1, csssccseascacceseeeees 590)/Class movement and against even | BILL lected by Harinatiuk & Socialist Old People’s Home, the trade unions has aroused great THE | Melnyk, Lorain, Ohio—J. Cottekill, N. seseeesess 6,00) indignation eon she worerss A | H AYWOOD’S darmatiuk, $1; M. Melnyk, Snensen Finnish Farmers and mass movement of protest has com- | 32; PB. Kaplanski, $1; M. Workers | Club, Snensen, menced which is certainly not less PROLET ARI AN | Urbanas, $1; Y. B. K., $15 Greco acs vessees 5,00| energetic and widespread than the | BOOK” 3, Kudrin, $2; H. Shnider, Ashtabula Working Women’s protest movement which took place | REVOLUTION | $1; P. Popow, $1; B. Or-C., Club, Ashtabula, Ohio 5.00| against the projected law of | i Nee aera <0) Smet $1; S. M. HL, $1; 1S. Ny Wm. Qualip, Ukiah, Cal. . 6,00 | SlRRapuips: . rd By V. I. LENIN k LISH BY SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT 31; W. P. R.,-C., 50c. 13.50 | J, Catalka, Chicago, Ill. 5.00 Numerous protest meetings have | y Ved i WITH THE INTERN. PUBLISHERS) anch 3, Sec. 5, Bronx 12.50 | Margaret Haas, Outlook, Mont. 6.00|taken place in Salonika. A general | aS OS Hected by the Y. W. }., [John Jokela, Copper «City, ipa she! EG Vy | | aterson, N, d., at the Mic ares veeeesss 5.00] Union has decided to hold a mass) + en a af * ue + select Council Banquet » Coquille, Or 5.00| protest demonstration all over the | he first comprehensive edition of this | Tat tie ety ak Aflected by N. Angeloff, De- Hotel Workers, N. Y. C. 5.00 | country. : Marxian classic. the class struggle by one jtroit, Mich.: N. Angeloff, L. Akmas, Pittsburgh, Pa. 5.00 AN b 4 who has a distinct place in the $5; S. Androff, $1; Steve Margaret Larkin, N. Y. 5.00, PUPPET TO VISIT FOR ORDERS | Lenin’s smashing answer to the rene- | Ou babor. «Movement Lambroff, $1; Elia Shim- Furrier Workers, Council 1, LONDON, (By Mail).—The Sultan | £ th an -aktichal | wwvvywweve weve merica jor J or if poff, 50c; Tarpa Argiroff, New York Gity .......-... 5.00)0f Zanzibar, puppet ruler of a gades of the Second International. START READING THESE His life was devoted to a relent- $1; N. Lazaroff, $1; T. Gus Nelsen, Stockton, Cali’ 2.00| British colony off Africa, will sr i ne ; | Ni S: less fight against capitalism Kirankoff, 25¢ aes 9 Mr. Baskin, W. Orange, N.J. 2.00 rive on a junket here May 31. The clearest exposition of the Marxian | MEMOIRS TODAY! oe ag the emancipation of yoff, 25¢; Angel Kostoff, Fd. Hirseh, Cincinnati, Ohio. 2.00 | A e workers. 25e; , Shimbotf, 50; Elia Bre. Sabina Z Brunnen, En- BOSSES WOULD END COMPEN: iat not State and the sham IN THE Kanjoff, 50¢ ...++seseseeee field, Minn. ... . 2.00 5 of Bourgeois Democracy. N.S 4 mpathizers of Eagle Pencil , « Cail Rorsey, Sai Francisco.. 200] JEFFERSON CITY, Mow By) . Baily Sa: Worker eviews + eae wees oN. Ys Gs veeeesee o Jos. Savihi, Solvay, N. Y... A ‘ail).—Missouri corporations have * Yo orkers (Communist) Party, Collected by Tom Ray, Mc- had a bill introduced in the legis- Paper ++ 50c Cloth ++ $1.00 26 UNION SQUARE, New York City Bank a ee a ree ae ureka, Calif. Donald, Pa.—S. Odair, $1; lature to repeal the workmens’ com- ON SALE AT ALL NEWSSTANDS Ww SUBSCRIBE! uncil 1, Plainfield, a aan Albert Januiter, $1 2.00 | pensation act. ; i IN NEW YORK AND VICINITY SIDE NEW YORK — SUBSCRIBE Jacksonville, Fla. 10.00/33, Gross, Bronx .. 1,00 Fs ‘ fleted, by. Thomas. Prise- oo} 28ei 4. Saks, 25e; 8. Ber- Workers Library Publishers 35 Kast 125th Street New York City =|

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